Quick Comparison
| NN1706 | Tesofensine | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | Approximately 14-18 hours, supporting once-daily dosing | 192-216 hours (8-9 days) |
| Typical Dosage | Phase 1 trials: stepwise dose escalation from low microgram doses up to multiple milligrams subcutaneous once daily. Optimal dosing for Phase 2/3 still being established. Daily dosing allows tighter dose adjustment than weekly drugs, at the cost of injection burden. | Clinical trials: 0.25-1.0 mg oral once daily in the morning. Phase II demonstrated dose-dependent weight loss. 0.5 mg dose showed optimal efficacy/safety balance. No established commercial dosing. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection (once daily) | Oral (capsule) |
| Research Papers | 1 papers | 0 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
NN1706
NN1706 is a once-daily GLP-1/GIP/glucagon triple receptor agonist — Novo Nordisk's mechanistic equivalent to Eli Lilly's retatrutide, designed to activate all three pathways simultaneously in a single molecule. Each receptor contributes complementary metabolic effects: GLP-1 agonism centrally suppresses appetite, slows gastric emptying, and stimulates glucose-dependent insulin secretion; GIP agonism augments insulin response and modulates adipose lipid handling; and glucagon receptor agonism in the liver drives fatty acid oxidation, ketogenesis, and hepatic glucose output, while in brown and beige adipose tissue it promotes thermogenesis and increases whole-body energy expenditure.
The key engineering challenge in any glucagon-containing multi-agonist is balancing glucagon's hyperglycemic tendency against the glucose-lowering effect of GLP-1 and GIP. NN1706's receptor potency ratios are tuned so that incretin-driven insulinotropic effects sufficiently offset glucagon-driven glucose production, producing net glycemic improvement alongside enhanced fat oxidation. The glucagon component is what differentiates triple agonists like NN1706 and retatrutide from dual GLP-1/GIP agonists like tirzepatide — the additional energy-expenditure and hepatic-fat-mobilising effects of glucagon are the main reason triple agonists have produced higher weight-loss numbers in early trials.
The pharmacokinetic profile gives NN1706 a half-life of roughly 14-18 hours, matched to once-daily subcutaneous dosing rather than the once-weekly schedule of retatrutide. The trade-off is more injections per week against tighter dose control, smoother plasma concentrations, and faster ability to adjust or pause dosing if side effects emerge. The first human data published in 2026 from Phase 1 trials in rodents, monkeys, and humans showed meaningful weight loss with an acceptable initial tolerability profile, setting up Phase 2 obesity and type 2 diabetes trials.
Tesofensine
Tesofensine is a novel triple monoamine reuptake inhibitor (TRI) that simultaneously blocks the presynaptic reuptake transporters for serotonin (SERT), norepinephrine (NET), and dopamine (DAT). Originally developed by NeuroSearch as NS2330 for neurodegenerative diseases, it was repurposed for obesity after clinical trials for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease unexpectedly revealed significant weight loss in treated patients.
The weight loss mechanism involves all three monoamine systems working in concert. Serotonin (5-HT) reuptake inhibition increases serotonergic tone in the hypothalamic appetite centers, particularly the paraventricular nucleus and ventromedial hypothalamus. Elevated synaptic serotonin activates 5-HT2C receptors on POMC neurons, promoting the release of alpha-MSH, which activates MC4R and produces satiety. This is the same pathway targeted by lorcaserin (Belviq), but tesofensine adds two additional mechanisms. Norepinephrine reuptake inhibition activates alpha-1 and beta-adrenergic receptors in the lateral hypothalamus, reducing appetite and increasing sympathetic nervous system activity, which raises basal metabolic rate and thermogenesis.
The dopamine reuptake inhibition component may be the most important differentiator. By increasing dopamine availability in the mesolimbic reward pathway (nucleus accumbens, ventral tegmental area), tesofensine may reduce the drive for food reward-seeking behavior — the compulsive eating of palatable, high-calorie foods that is mediated by dopamine signaling in the same circuits involved in addiction. This addresses a component of obesity that pure appetite suppressants miss: the hedonic (pleasure-driven) eating that overrides homeostatic satiety signals. Phase II clinical trials demonstrated remarkable efficacy — the 0.5 mg dose produced approximately 12.8 kg weight loss over 6 months, roughly double what GLP-1 receptor agonists typically achieve — though cardiovascular monitoring is necessary due to increases in heart rate associated with the noradrenergic and dopaminergic effects.
Risks & Safety
NN1706
Common
nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, decreased appetite (similar to other GLP-1 class drugs). Daily dosing produces more even side-effect profile vs weekly peaks but requires daily injections.
Serious
pancreatitis, gallstones, slightly elevated heart rate (signal seen with other glucagon-receptor-active drugs).
Rare
thyroid C-cell tumour class warning, severe allergic reactions. Limited human safety data so far.
Tesofensine
Common
increased heart rate, dry mouth, insomnia, constipation, nausea, dizziness.
Serious
cardiovascular effects (sustained elevated heart rate), mood changes and potential psychiatric effects (all three brain chemical systems affected), suicidal ideation (class warning for CNS-active drugs).
Rare
serotonin syndrome if combined with other serotonergic drugs, significant heart rhythm problems. Cardiovascular monitoring recommended.
Full Profiles
NN1706 →
Novo Nordisk's answer to retatrutide — a once-daily injection that activates all three of the major appetite and metabolism hormones (GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon). The first human data was published in 2026, showing meaningful weight loss in obese subjects and confirming the daily-dosing mechanism is tolerable. Direct competitor to Lilly's once-weekly retatrutide, with the trade-off of more frequent dosing in exchange for potentially smoother side-effect control and easier dose adjustment.
Tesofensine →
A medication that blocks reuptake of serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine — originally developed for Alzheimer's and Parkinson's but showed significant weight loss in clinical trials. Reduces appetite through brain signaling in appetite centers. A different approach than GLP-1 medications and other peptide-based weight loss treatments.